<h1 id='t2271'>CHAPTER VI—A PROWLER IN THE DARK</h1>
<p>The night passed without further attack, and
at dawn the lads scouted carefully about
the scene of the battle and found the bodies
of twelve large timber wolves. They found another
wounded wolf hiding under the top of a
fallen tree, and they rushed upon it and killed it
with their war-clubs. Well pleased with their victory,
the young Delawares spent some time chanting
war-songs and dancing about the bodies of
their victims. Then they broke off the tusks of the
largest wolves as trophies to be proudly exhibited
when they finally returned to the Delaware village.</p>
<p>On the way back to the river Running Fox saw
a small dark animal bounding along ahead of him.
He immediately ran in pursuit of it, and as it
flashed up the trunk of a tree he saw that it was,
as he had guessed, a black squirrel. The squirrel
hid on one side of the tree, and as Running Fox
moved cautiously about the tree-trunk the crafty
little creature moved with him, so that he was unable
to surprise it. At last, however, Running
Fox took his bow and stirred the leaves on the opposite
side of the tree. It was an old hunting
trick which he had learned from his father, and
it proved entirely successful. Thinking that its
pursuer was coming around on that side the bewildered
squirrel edged around in full view of
Running Fox. A moment afterward it fell at his
feet with an arrow through its body.</p>
<p>“Well, Wisawanik knows how to hide, but I
fooled him,” laughed Running Fox, as he held
up the prize. “See, Spotted Deer, I have killed
a chief who wears the black robe. Yes, I have
done what the medicine creatures told me to do.”</p>
<p>Running Fox removed the black pelt with great
care, and fastened it to his belt. Then they continued
toward the river. As they neared the water
they climbed to the top of a hardwood ridge to reconnoiter.
They knew that they were almost at
the end of the Delaware hunting grounds, and the
thought made them cautious.</p>
<p>“Pretty soon we will enter the country of our
enemies,” said Running Fox. “Many of our people
have been killed in that country. We must be
very watchful.”</p>
<p>“We will be as sharp as Woakus, the fox,” replied
Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>They were able to see a long way up and down
the river from the top of the ridge, and they studied
the water with great care. However, as they
failed to discover anything to arouse their suspicions,
they soon resumed their way into the
north. The day was more than half gone when
Running Fox suddenly stopped, and pointed to a
high rocky cliff on the opposite side of the river,
and then to a massive dead pine directly ahead of
them.</p>
<p>“Do you see that high rocky place over there?”
he inquired, turning to Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“Yes, I see it,” replied Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“Do you see that big tree ahead of us?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I see it.”</p>
<p>“Well, we have reached the beginning of the
great Iroquois hunting grounds,” declared Running
Fox. “It begins over there on that side
where you see those rocks, and it begins on this
side where you see that big tree ahead of us. Do
you know anything about those rocks?”</p>
<p>“No, I do not know about them,” replied Spotted
Deer.</p>
<p>“Well, I will tell you about something that happened
there,” said Running Fox. “I will tell it
just as my father told it to me. Our people call
that place Laktschellan, which means the-jumping-over-place.
Now I will tell you how it got that
name. A long time ago a Delaware hunter was
chased up on those rocks by some Mohawks. Well,
when they saw him up there they began to laugh
because they thought he could not get away.
Pretty soon they heard him calling down to them.
He told them that he was going to jump down into
the water. Well, when they heard that they began
to laugh some more, because they thought he
would surely be killed. Then some of the Mohawks
began to climb up the rocks. When the
Delaware saw them coming he gave a loud shout
and jumped away from the rocks. He made a
great noise when he fell into the water, and a
white cloud flew high up into the air. Well, the
Mohawks began to watch the water. They watched
a long time, but he never appeared. Then they
thought he was dead. Some of them began to
jump into the water to find his body. Well, while
they were doing that the Delaware was hiding in
the bushes a little way off. He was laughing about
how he had fooled the Mohawks. He waited there
until the Mohawks got tired and went away. Then
he ran to the Delaware camp, and told what he
had done. The name of that brave man was Striking
Hawk, and he lived a very long time ago.”</p>
<p>“That is a good thing to know about,” declared
Spotted Deer. “Whenever I pass that place I will
always think about that brave hunter.”</p>
<p>A few moments afterwards the lads entered the
hunting grounds of their foes. The real war-journey
had actually begun. The thought thrilled
them. Still they were serious and thoughtful.
They knew that many foes lurked in the vast wilderness
which they were about to explore, and
they realized the difficulty of avoiding them. Besides
the Mohawks there were several other tribes
of the great Iroquois nation who wandered into
that country to hunt and fish with their tribesmen.
These visitors were mostly Oneidas and Onondagas,
whose villages were comparatively near the Mohawks,
but the fierce Cayugas and the still fiercer
Senecas occasionally came from the lakes and
mountains far away toward the setting sun. Then
there were also the Shawnees, who frequently ventured
into the Iroquois country in large numbers.
Such an array of enemies might have made the
most courageous warrior hesitate about entering
that perilous region, and the young Delawares
knew that they must keep constantly alert to their
danger if they hoped to escape.</p>
<p>The lads continued along the river until near the
end of the day, and then they turned deeper into
the forest to find a safe hiding place in which to
spend the night. They were making their way
carefully over a rocky piece of ground covered with
blueberry bushes, when they heard a loud buzzing
sound close beside them.</p>
<p>“Hi, that is Wischalowe, the Frightener,” cried
Running Fox.</p>
<p>They recognized the sound as the angry buzzing
of a rattlesnake. It seemed to be in a dense thicket
of blueberry bushes, The lads realized that they
must approach it with caution, for they knew that
its bite was very deadly. Running Fox picked up
several stones, and advanced carefully into the
thicket. When he came near the sound he stopped
and looked for the snake. At last he saw it several
bow-lengths ahead of him. It was coiled to
strike.</p>
<p>“Hi, Wischalowe, I have found you,” cried
Running Fox. “You look very ugly. Yes, you
are called ‘The Frightener.’ Well, I am not
afraid of you. Your war-cry does not frighten me.
I have killed some of your people. Now I am going
to kill you. But I am going to give you a
chance to fight. Come, let me see how brave you
are.”</p>
<p>Running Fox advanced directly toward the angry
snake. He parted the bushes carefully with
his bow, and walked almost within bow-length.
Then he stopped, and continued to taunt Wischalowe.
However, the rattlesnake made no attempt
to strike, and Running Fox tossed one of the stones
within a hand-breadth of it. The snake instantly
lowered its head and flattened its body against the
ground—it was evidently about to strike. Running
Fox advanced a step nearer, and the snake
uncoiled two-thirds of its body and struck at him.
He saw the ugly open mouth and the deadly fangs
as he sprang aside.</p>
<p>“Well, Wischalowe, you are very slow, like an
old man,” laughed Running Fox. “Yes, I see
that you are very mad about it. You are making
a great noise. Perhaps it would frighten the
women and children. Is that how you got your
name? Well, Wischalowe, this will be your last
song. Now I am going to kill you.”</p>
<p>However, as Running Fox threw the rock the
snake struck, and he missed it. Then to his surprise
the snake partially coiled and struck again.
It was an unexpected maneuver, and the reckless
young Delaware barely escaped. He struck savagely
with his bow, and hit the reptile a stunning
blow behind the head. Before it recovered he
stooped and crushed it with his war-club. Then
he cut the string of bony scales, or rattles, from,
the end of its tail.</p>
<p>“Well, that was an easy fight,” laughed Running
Fox, as he rejoined Spotted Deer. “Wischalowe
tried to frighten us, and now I have killed
him.”</p>
<p>“Wisehalowe was foolish,” replied Spotted
Deer.</p>
<p>At the end of the day they stopped for the night
beside a splendid little woodland spring, in the
midst of a wonderful forest of towering hemlocks.
The trees were so large and stood so close together
that perpetual twilight reigned beneath them.
Night came swiftly after sunset in that dense stand
of timber, and the lads missed the cheery glow of
the little camp-fire, for they believed that it would
be foolhardy to run the risk of lighting it. They
sat close together in the darkness, therefore, conversing
in low, guarded tones and listening anxiously
at the slightest sound. However, the great
wilderness was unusually still, and they heard only
the night wind whispering softly in the tree-tops.</p>
<p>“Schawanachen, the warm wind, is singing the
sleep song,” said Running Fox.</p>
<p>“It is a pretty song,” replied Spotted Deer.
“Come, we will pile up some of this long grass,
and let Schawanachen sing us to sleep.”</p>
<p>They gathered several armfuls of the long feathery
ferns that grew in great abundance at that
spot, and made couches of them. Then they
wrapped themselves in their robes and lay down to
sleep.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it would be a good thing for one of
us to watch,” suggested Running Fox.</p>
<p>“No, I do not believe we are in any danger
here,” said Spotted Deer. “We have not seen or
heard anything to trouble us.”</p>
<p>“That is true,” agreed Running Fox. “Well,
we will not do anything about it.”</p>
<p>They had not been long asleep when Running
Fox awakened with a feeling that all was not well.
He raised himself cautiously upon his elbow, and
spent many moments looking and listening for
signs of danger. Spotted Deer was slumbering
soundly, and Running Fox determined not to
awaken him unless he discovered something to verify
his uneasiness.</p>
<p>“This is a strange thing,” Running Fox whispered
to himself. “I do not see anything, and I
do not hear anything, but I feel something wrong.
I believe we are in some kind of danger. Well,
I will watch.”</p>
<p>For a long time, however, he found no reason
for his suspicions. Still the peculiar premonition
of danger persisted. It troubled him. He believed
it was a warning from Getanittowit, and yet
he did not know how to interpret it. Then he
thought he heard something moving through the
ferns. He held his breath to listen, but the silence
was unbroken. At last, convinced that his
fears were groundless, Running Fox again lay
down to sleep. He had barely closed his eyes, however,
when he was roused by the same stealthy
sound in the ferns.</p>
<p>“Now I know that something is wrong,” Running
Fox told himself.</p>
<p>As he sat up and stared anxiously into the night
he again heard the gentle rustling of the ferns.
For a moment he wondered if it might not be the
wind. All was still, however, and even the murmurs
in the tree-tops had died away. Running
Fox felt that he was being watched. A few moments
later his suspicions were verified, as a pair
of glowing eyes shone from the darkness. Aware
that they were threatened by some savage prowler
of the wilderness, Running Fox leaned over and
touched Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“Do not make any noise,” cautioned Running
Fox, as Spotted Deer awakened.</p>
<p>“What has happened?” Spotted Deer inquired,
anxiously.</p>
<p>“I do not know what it is, but something is
watching us,” declared Running Fox. “Yes, I
heard it, and I saw its eyes.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps the wolves have followed us,” whispered
Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“No, it is something different,” replied Running
Fox. “Listen.”</p>
<p>They heard something circling softly about them
through the ferns. Then they caught the momentary
flash of a pair of eyes. The next instant they
vanished, and a twig snapped somewhere within
bow-shot.</p>
<p>“I believe it is Timmeu, the wolf,” declared
Spotted Deer. “Perhaps he has come back to
fight us.”</p>
<p>“No, it is not Timmeu,” replied Running Fox.
“The eyes are different, and this thing moves
slower.”</p>
<p>They heard a low growl, like that of an angry
dog. Then they again saw the weird shining eyes
watching them.</p>
<p>“Perhaps some Evil Spirit lives in this place,”
Spotted Deer suggested, uneasily.</p>
<p>“No, I do not believe it,” Running Fox assured
him. “I believe it is Quenischquney, the panther.
Yes, it is the sound I heard in my dream. Now
I will tell you what to do. I will shoot my arrow.
Then if Quenisehquney jumps in to fight you must
send your arrow into him. By that time I will
be ready with another arrow.”</p>
<p>“I am ready,” said Spotted Deer. “See, there
are his eyes. He sounds mad.”</p>
<p>Running Fox discharged his arrow. They heard
it strike, and then a terrifying scream rang
through the night. A moment later a long dark
form crouched before them. They heard the tail
swishing rapidly among the ferns, and read a
warning in the flashing eyes.</p>
<p>“Do something!” cried Running Fox, as he prepared
another arrow.</p>
<p>Spotted Deer had hesitated an instant too long,
and as he released his bow-string the panther
sprang. It missed him by less than a bow-length,
and disappeared into the night. They heard it
coughing and snarling, and thrashing about in the
ferns. Then it suddenly became quiet.</p>
<p>“It is dead,” said Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” replied Running Fox. “Quenischquney
is very cute, we must be careful.”</p>
<p>They watched anxiously, but the eyes failed to
appear. Then, as the silence continued, Running
Fox began to grow uneasy. He feared that the
panther might have sneaked away, and the possibility
made him reckless.</p>
<p>“I do not like this,” he told Spotted Deer.
“Perhaps, as you say, Quenischquney is dead. But
perhaps he has sneaked away. That would be very
bad. I must follow him and kill him. Yes, I
must take his claws, and wear them as the mysterious
Medicine Creatures told me to do. If I
do not obey them something bad may happen to
us. Now I am going over there to find out if
Quenischquney is dead.”</p>
<p>“That is a very dangerous thing to do,” protested
Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“Well, I cannot help it,” replied Running Fox.
“I must not let Quenischquney get away.”</p>
<p>“I will go with you,” proposed Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>They waited some moments, watching and listening
for a clue to the whereabouts of the
wounded panther. Then, as the baffling silence
continued, they advanced cautiously toward the
place where they had last seen the glare of its
eyes. They went forward very slowly, about a
bow-length apart. It was very dark, and they
realized that they must depend more upon their
ears than their eyes to warn them of danger.
After every third or fourth stride, therefore, they
stopped to listen, while they peered anxiously on
all sides of them for a tell-tale flash of those ugly
green eyes. However, they neither heard or saw
anything of the animal they sought.</p>
<p>“I believe that fierce Quenischquney is dead,”
declared Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“We must not be too sure,” Running Fox
warned him.</p>
<p>He had barely finished speaking when they heard
a warning growl directly ahead of them. They
stopped and watched for a chance to shoot their
arrows. The growling continued, and they heard
the ferns rustling, but they were unable to locate
the panther. They knew it was close to them, but
for some reason they were unable to discover its
eyes. For a moment they were puzzled. Then
Running Fox guessed the truth.</p>
<p>“I know how it is,” he whispered, excitedly.
“Quenischquney is crouching down in the high
grass. I believe he is getting ready to jump.”</p>
<p>“Shall I send an arrow over there where we
hear him?” asked Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>Quenischquney himself answered the question,
for at that very instant he made his spring, and
bore Spotted Deer to the ground. Running Fox
saw a long black shadow pass before him, heard a
short angry snarl, and then the quick startled voice
of Spotted Deer. For an instant the suddenness
of the attack bewildered him. He hesitated a moment
to recover his wits, and then as Spotted Deer
called to him he sprang to his assistance.</p>
<p>“O Running Fox! Running Fox!” screamed
Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>“Use your knife!” cried Running Fox.</p>
<p>The next instant he was upon the panther. He
plunged his flint knife deep behind the shoulder.</p>
<p>Then, as the infuriated beast turned upon him, he
drove an arrow into its body. Quenischquney
leaped, but crashed to the ground within a bow-length.
For some moments he thrashed wildly
about in the ferns, coughing and snarling furiously.
Then he became still. The lads approached
cautiously, and saw him lying quietly upon his side.
Running Fox drove another arrow into him, but
he failed to move. Then they went up to him, and
saw that he was dead.</p>
<p>“Did Quenischquney do much harm to you?”
Running Fox asked Spotted Deer. “Come over
here and let me look at you.”</p>
<p>“No, Quenischquney did not harm me,” Spotted
Deer replied, bravely. “I felt his claws, but
I stuck my knife into his throat, and he could not
bite me. Yes, I am bloody, but most of it came
from Quenischquney. It is a good thing you were
with me. If I had been alone I might have been
killed.”</p>
<p>Running Fox saw that Spotted Deer had escaped
without serious injury. He had a number
of painful gashes on his arms and the upper part
of his body, but Running Fox hurried him to the
spring and soon stopped the bleeding by soaking
small pieces of sphagnum moss in the cold water
and inserting it in the wounds.</p>
<p>“Well, you will have some marks on your body
to tell about when we get back to our people,”
laughed Running Fox.</p>
<p>“I will tell them how you killed Quenischquney,”
replied Spotted Deer.</p>
<p>As Spotted Deer declared that he felt little pain
from his injuries, they returned to the dead
panther and cut off the claws. Then they sang
medicine-songs, and danced about the body of
Quenischquney until well along toward the middle
of the night.</p>
<p>“Now we will stop,” Running Fox said, finally,
“It will soon be light. Come, we will go back and
lie down again.”</p>
<p>“Yes, we can sleep easy, fierce Quenischquney
will not trouble us now,” replied Spotted Deer.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />